The Pak Banker

Clarke named as captain of Australia despite fitness concerns

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Selectors named Michael Clarke Sunday as captain of Australia's squad for next month's World Cup, with a fitness contingenc­y should he not be able to play following recent hamstring surgery.

Clarke, who missed the final three Tests against India following the surgery, has been given until February 21 to prove his fitness for the one-day tournament.

"Captain Michael Clarke will lead our World Cup campaign should he recover from his injury," chief selector Rod Marsh said.

"He is one of the world's best batsmen and we want to give him every chance to prove his fitness for a tournament as important as this one.

"Our medical staff are pleased with his progress following hamstring surgery in December and he continues to undergo thorough rehabilita­tion work with a view to being ready to play an important role in the World Cup.

"We have said that if Michael has not recovered by our second match of the tournament against Bangladesh on 21 February, we will replace him in the squad.

"He understand­s that and is working tirelessly with medical staff to get back to fitness."

A standby player for Clarke has not been named however Marsh said that if he became unavailabl­e, George Bailey would captain the side in his absence.

All-rounder Mitchell Marsh, who missed the recent Melbourne and Sydney Tests against India with hamstring trouble, was also named in a squad that contained few surprises.

Selectors also included all-rounders Shane Watson and James Faulkner, while the versatile Glenn Maxwell gets his chance.

Xavier Doherty was picked as the sole recognised spinner, with Maxwell expected to provide the side's spin in most games.

Mitchell Johnson, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood comprise Australia's pace attack, while Brad Haddin will keep wickets.

David Warner and Aaron Finch will open the batting for Australia, with batsmen Steve Smith, in the form of his life after scoring 769 runs in the four-Test series against India, and Bailey rounding out the squad.

Marsh said all-rounder Marsh was on track to be fit for the start of the World Cup.

"Mitchell is progressin­g well with his rehab and we expect him to be available at some stage during the tri-series against India with the aim to have him well prepared for the World Cup," the chief selector said.

"This group has played a major role in getting Australia back to number one in one-day cricket and we feel we have the right mix of players to represent our country on the biggest stage of all. "These players have really gelled over the past 18 months with their preparatio­n geared towards giving us the best chance of winning a World Cup on home soil."

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